The
boys had attached lines to the four corners, which
connected to a long coil
of rope.
Lars and Fahd were holding
the sheet out, the corners whipping as the wind tried to catch
it. Nish unwound the coil of rope, then tied it around his waist.
"He's not!" Dmitri said.
"He is!" shouted Sam with a squeal.
"He's crazy!" added Travis.
Nish gave the thumbs-up,
and Fahd and Lars let the wind fill the sheet. It swelled at once
with the hard breeze flowing up the canal, and Nish suddenly shot
out from the crowd that had gathered around.
"KA-WA-BUNG-GA!!!" Nish screamed.
He shot by the four Owls
with a huge smile on his beet-red face. Travis had rarely seen
him look so triumphant – and Travis had seen many, many
such looks on his best friend's face.
Nish ripped by . . . and
he began to soar!
The wind had gusted from
somewhere beyond the Chateau Laurier, dipped down into the trough
of the canal, and punched hard like a fist into the open sheet,
lifting Nish off the ice and into the air.
He was airborne!
He was also helpless. He
had tied the rope tight around his waist and now was frantically
trying to loosen it and escape. But it was too late. The wind
gusted harder, and Nish, having harnessed its power, had to go
along for the ride – for however long it lasted.
People were screaming.
Some were pointing their cellphones in Nish's direction,
hoping to capture a photo of the flying skater.
Nish rose higher in an
updraft. Travis could hear him screaming, his high-pitched shriek
a familiar note in a full orchestra of screaming and shouting
from along the ice.The world's largest skating rink had
come to a complete halt. People stood still and stared up in awe.
Nish flew even higher,
now four storeys or more above the crowd. As he flew along the
canal, the skaters in his path parted, fearing he would release
himself and drop like a sack of cement wearing two sharp skate
blades.
Nish screamed and the wind
changed direction, buckling the sheet in half. The sheet fluttered
and folded, and Nish plummeted to earth.
He came down hard on the
roof of the nearest kiosk, smashing through the structure and
landing smack on a table stacked with dough for the day's
production of beaver tails.
The thick, soft dough,
police would later tell the Ottawa Citizen, probably
prevented more serious injury to the boy.
Still, Nish ended up with
a twisted knee and a nose full of dough. His nose would be unplugged
by a nurse with a warm washcloth, but the knee would take longer.
The doctor at the children's hospital advised him to stay
off it for two to three days.
No hockey.
The Screech Owls had just
lost their Number One defenceman.
Excerpted from Peril at the World's Biggest Hockey Tournament by
Roy MacGregor Copyright © 2008 by Roy MacGregor. Excerpted
by permission of McClelland & Stewart. All rights reserved.
No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission
in writing from the publisher.
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